Judge John Hodgman - Live from Denver
Episode Date: April 5, 2023This week’s episode was recorded live in front of an audience at the Gothic Theatre in Denver! Our first case is BUY ME SUBPOENAS AND CRACKERJACK: Paul brings the case against his friend Chris. Chri...s has stopped believing in baseball superstitions and jinxes. He says his behavior can’t affect the outcome of a baseball game. But Paul says his friend’s carelessness has jinxed his team! PLUS: Swift Justice featuring the legendary David Gborie!Thanks to reddit user u/ScrotalMigraine for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
This week's episode recorded live at the Gothic Theater in beautiful Denver, Colorado.
Beautiful, mile high, Denver, Colorado.
Another stop on our frontier justice tour of the West.
And it featured our friend, the great David Borey.
Literally one of the funniest comedians in the world.
Oh, there are few in comedy I love as much as I love the great David Borey. Literally one of the funniest comedians in the world. Oh, there are few in comedy I love as much as I love the great David Borey.
One of the funniest, best guys in the history of entertainment, as far as I'm concerned.
This was a great show.
I'm really excited to hear it.
Let's go to the stage at the Gothic Theater.
Denver, Colorado, you've come to us desperate for justice, and we're here at the Gothic Theater to deliver it.
Let's bring out our first set of litigants. Please welcome Paul and Chris.
Tonight's case, buy me subpoenas and Cracker Jack.
Paul brings the case against his friend Chris. Chris has stopped believing
in baseball superstitions and jinxes. He says his behavior can't affect the outcome of a baseball
game. Paul says his friend's carelessness has jinxed the team. Who's right, who's wrong,
only one can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and delivers an obscure cultural reference.
People at the time asked me, did you know she was going to become so famous?
And I say,
no, I didn't. But she did. Bailiff Jesse Thorne,
please swear them in.
Paul and Chris, please rise and raise your right
hands. Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth, so help you God or whatever?
Yes, I do.
Do you swear to abide
by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact the only sport he follows
is horse race gambling and not a wholesome trotting race,
but a race where they sit down right on the horse?
Yes.
I do.
Makes your blood boil, I should say.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Paul and Chris, you may be seated.
You've got a lot of energy coming off of you.
Which one of you is Paul?
I'm Paul.
Yeah, I could tell.
For the at-home listener, Paul is...
believes he's on the Philadelphia Phillies.
According to visual evidence.
You've got five hours of energy coming off of you,
and I should know.
Yes, I do.
Paul and Chris, you may be seated.
For an immediate summary judgment, one of your favorites, can off of you, and I should know. Yes, I do. Paul and Chris, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment.
One of your favorites, can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
It says here, Paul, why don't you go first?
No.
Chris, you go first.
Do you want to hear it again?
I'm sorry.
Yes, please.
Okay.
So this is a podcast.
And I make an obscure cultural reference.
And if you can guess the source of it, then you automatically win the case.
So here is that obscure cultural reference again.
People at the time asked me, did you know she was going to become so famous?
And I say, no, I didn't.
But she did.
Who am I quoting, Chris?
Any guesses?
One guess?
Madonna.
Madonna.
It's a great guess.
She's a celebrity entertainer.
That's true.
Who is Madonna talking about in that quote?
Was I on the right track?
Actually, yes.
Paul?
Tina Turner.
Tina Turner.
Okay.
So the person is talking about someone else.
The bodyguard, Kevin Costner.
Okay.
Kevin Costner talking about Tina Turner.
Wait, hold on.
Right.
Do you think that Kevin Costner goes by the bodyguard Kevin Costner?
That's right.
Like Jesse the Body Ventura.
And Chris, your guess is Kevin Costner talking about Madonna.
Would that be your guess?
Yes.
Okay, no, do you have another guess?
You seem to be wanting to say something.
And given that it's podcast,
that'd be good.
Sorry, Your Honor, I don't.
Okay.
No, that's great.
Great guesses.
Kevin Costner and Madonna, the whole thing was great.
Yeah, it's all great.
But all guesses are wrong.
I was quoting someone named Bonnie Erickson.
Paul, do you know who Bonnie Erickson is?
I do not.
Do you know who she was speaking of?
Kevin Costner?
No.
People at the time asked,
did you know she was going to become so famous? And I say, no, I didn't. But she did. She was speaking of Miss Piggy. Why was Bonnie Erickson talking about Miss Piggy? Chris, guess? Okay.
The reason is Bonnie Erickson worked for Muppet Studios,
and she designed Miss Piggy.
She also designed Statler and Waldorf and Zoot.
And she also designed someone that is close to your heart, Paul,
even if you don't know it.
Someone or something called the Philly Fanatic, Paul.
How does that make Fanatic, Paul.
How does that make you feel, Paul? It feels very bad. It feels really bad.
You should know.
Not for the last time, I'm sure.
Yes.
So who seeks justice?
Since we have to hear this case,
who seeks justice in this court?
I do, Your Honor.
And what is the nature of the justice you seek?
Well, like Bailiff Jesse said,
Chris has stopped believing in baseball jinxes,
which is fine for his team,
the Seattle Mariners, the Seattle Seahawks,
but when he breaks them out
and they affect my team,
I'm seeking an injunction
to prevent him from jinxing my team.
Now, your team is the Philadelphia Phillies.
It is.
You are wearing their costumery right now.
I am.
And they came in second in the World Series.
Is that correct?
I guess so.
That's right, yes.
Which is an honor unto itself.
It's true.
It's true.
And that's because Chris jinxed them.
He did, yes.
How did Chris jinx them?
So Chris and I run together regularly, and we talk a lot about sports.
We talk about a lot of things.
But when we talk about sports, we try to respect each other's teams.
Both of our teams made the
playoffs this year his for the first time in 20 years and you know we tried to avoid stepping on
each other's teams with jinxes until the last day of the season when chris said during a run sort of
cavalierly the first hang on hang on chris do you remember what you said? I do only, I've been reminded of it a few times.
Just for the purpose of dramatic reenactment.
Right.
Can you say it?
What Paul claims I jinxed him on was
that the Phillies had kept
the Astros designated hitter Jordan Alvarez in check.
Ooh.
Yeah.
What a spooky incantation.
Yeah.
Paul, what does that mean, and why should I care?
Well, I certainly cared,
because Jordan Alvarez,
who, by the way, hit a game-winning home run against his Mariners earlier in the playoffs,
hit a World Series winning home run against my Phillies that night.
I see. So what did he do?
What was the jinx?
Mentioning the name?
Speaking at all?
Because it is unusual for Chris.
speaking at all because it is unusual for chris saying specifically that we had kept this player in check while the world series was still happening
to say something is going well for your team oh i see is immediately going to upend it it's like
saying it's like saying the words no hitter during a no hitter you're gonna wreck it you're gonna it
be right of course because you have incredible mental powers. That's true.
Everyone does. That's true. We all do.
That's exactly right. Everything, every fan
does. There are incredible mental powers
that can only be challenged by taking
off your hat, folding it in half, and then putting
it on top of your head like a shark's fin.
Chris, how do you respond to this accusation
that you jinxed the Phillies and lost them the World Series
and made all sad and 1% less bubbly?
Right.
I mean, it's an amazing feeling knowing you had that power.
That part I do relish.
Honestly, I don't believe in jinxes at all anymore I don't believe in the power of a fan to jinx their team
and I base that on decades
of supporting Seattle sports
laughter
there clearly is no order in the universe.
Destiny has no authorship.
We are destined to cycle into oblivion.
Look around you.
That's my quote of Chris.
Paul, this is not the first time you've been part of the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Is that not correct?
That is correct.
Indeed, it's not even the second time.
It's not.
You've been part of my life.
Is that not correct?
That's true.
I see you backing up.
Yeah.
Why?
Explain to me your previous intrusions into my life and explain why I should not be calling security right now.
So I was a litigant on episode 113.
113.
Uniform Code of...
Before many of you were born.
It was 10 years ago.
It was June of 2013.
It was Uniform...
Five-hour energy drink had just been invented.
It was uniform code of podcast justice, and my friend Jeremy brought the case against me
that I should not be allowed to wear Phillies gear to a game in which the Phillies were not playing.
So I submitted as evidence a picture of us at Dodger Stadium in a game between the Dodgers and the Reds in 2009,
wearing this.
That outfit.
Including the Crocs.
So what we're seeing here is a cotton,
classic early 1980s style Philadelphia Phil,
like a Mike Schmidt style Phillies hat. Got on one of the
little star dot Phillies uniforms, like a Darren Dalton type uniform, and then Crocs like a real
jerk would wear. Well, so, and Judge Hodgman, you commented at the time that it was a mixed bag of,
you know, different versions of the Phillies brand identity.
You did call it during that podcast.
You called it my Phillies clown outfit.
Yes, because you were wearing a motley fool arrangement.
It's truly swag.
It's true.
And I never had a chance to see it in person, nor did I particularly want to.
Here it is.
But here we are.
But the other time. Yes. The first time we interacted, you ruled I particularly want to. Here it is. But here we are. But the other time, the first time
we interacted, you ruled
in your New York Times column net.
New York Times magazine column.
Sorry, New York Times magazine
column net. That's right. I don't want to be associated
with the failing New York Times newspaper
as opposed to
the thriving New York Times magazine.
But I wrote to you about my collection of ice cream helmets.
Yes.
From baseball games.
That's right.
I recall now.
Right.
I didn't know that you were the same person.
I'm the same person.
Yeah.
And you commented, just to make a long story short,
you commented that the difference between a hoarder...
Well, how many did you have?
At the time, I had maybe 50 or 60.
And how many do you have now?
About 430.
Okay.
And at the time, you said the difference between a hoarder and a collector is a display case.
That's true.
That was the origin of that.
That was the origin of that quote, which you have repeated many times. That Judge John Hodgman
quote. Yeah, but that time you had
60 of them. I did.
And they were ordered out of my
kitchen cabinets.
If I may, I actually did bring
gifts for you
and Bailiff Jesse from
the collection. I have
a Portland Seadogs
ice cream helmet.
Oh, sure. That's a minor league team in Portland, Maine.
A AA affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.
Uh-huh. That's also a sports team. I know my stuff.
Right? And so this is the summertime, fun time, minor league baseballs, Portland Seadogs.
Sure.
Jesse, I had a little harder time coming up with a good gift for him. But a year ago this month, Jesse had as a guest on Bullseye, Alan Tudyk from the TV show Firefly.
That's right.
We were just talking about Tudyk last night.
Love Tudyk.
That's right.
And so I have brought for Jesse a helmet from the Columbia Fireflies.
From the Columbia Fireflies.
A high-A affiliate of the Kansas City Roads.
I would ask our road producer, Richard Roby, to come out here, please, and take these things away from you.
And off the stage and do the standard poison testing.
Yeah.
Very generous of you.
In your New York Times Magazine column net, you refer to them as garbage toys.
Well, Paul, it's nice to see you again.
What was the name of the person that
you had the dispute with
when you were on the
podcast? His name was Jeremy.
And he's obviously not in your life anymore.
No, he is. He's one of my very good friends.
Chris, how much did he pay you to be here?
Obviously, you don't have a dispute.
It's clear you have no idea where you are or why.
I'm not actually sure that you've ever met Paul before.
I kind of feel like there was a Craigslist ad going,
will someone pretend to be in a fight with
me so that I can skip
the meet and greet line at the Judge John
Odgman show and present
my tokens live on stage
for my own sick amusement.
Is that not what happened?
Don't wait for the translation, Chris. Answer the question.
This is a lot.
I'm going to ask you a series of simple questions that you can answer.
Okay.
Truthfully, I hope.
Yes.
I'll remind you you're under fake oath.
Do you know Paul?
I do.
Are you his friend?
I am.
How long have you been his friend?
15 years.
Oh, okay.
Very good.
Is he always like this?
He's passionate, for sure.
Yeah?
For sure.
very good. Is he always like this? He's passionate for sure. Yeah, for sure.
So you are here in a good faith effort to resolve a dispute because you don't like being accused of jinxing the Philadelphia Phillies. Absolutely. Well, I don't mind jinxing the Phillies.
But I don't honestly feel I have the power to do so.
Was there a time that you believed in superstitions?
100%.
I spent most of my life thinking I could impact the Mariners and the Seahawks.
And it turns out, I can't.
Yeah.
What ways would you attempt to impact their performance on the baseball pitch
and the
whatever
the other team that you like
the Seahawks
in the football sphere
exactly thank you
yeah so I think it's like most fans would.
Would you wear a special hat and they'd get one more into the score hole or something?
A little.
Did you have a Philly's clown outfit you would wear?
I don't.
Was there a podcaster you would stalk?
If I could just talk to him,
the Mariners would go all the way.
Sadly, no.
I don't think I did anything out of the ordinary
from a fan perspective.
I don't know anything about sports.
So just please establish what is ordinary
vis-a-vis superstitions.
What kinds of things would you do or not do
in order to affect the outcome of these games?
So the Seattle Mariners have been in the playoffs
very few times in my life.
And as a grown man,
there should have been a lot of games to be involved in.
So I would...
I'm sorry to pause.
Paul, Chris claims he's known you for about 15 years.
That's true.
Does he always sound so sad, or just when talking about the manners?
Because it's heartbreaking.
It's genuinely heartbreaking.
Can I say...
I just want to say, Chris is a salesman professionally.
His job...
He's in sales.
Do I sound sad? That makes me feel bad Well, no, I mean
It's because of the Mariners
It's not, John, it's not exactly sadness
that animates the Mariners
It's the example of their great hero, Ichiro
who, until he was 48 years old
just spent the whole winter hitting fungos
in a frozen baseball stadium in Japan
so he could come back for one more not-playoffs year in Seattle.
You relate to that, right?
Absolutely.
There's a sort of honor in the toil in the minds of failure.
I understand. I understand. So what would you do in order
to try to make it go? If I'm at a game
I could easily be on the concourse watching through my hands.
If I'm at home. Because you're afraid that if you witness
if they know that you're watching they will fail.
That's true. Right it let it be known that members of the audience are saying that is absolutely true right right so
so so if i if i'm watching through my fingers and we get a hit then i have to continue to do that
may i see how you would i mean will you show me how you would watch through your fingers? Yeah, so, well, I'd be holding a beer here, and then I'm like this.
Right.
Right?
You form a little twin facehuggers from Alien mask for yourself.
Right.
Okay, I got you.
I really painted a word picture there for the at-home audience.
And I think I took it to a...
I could have said fleshy goalie mask but i think the
twin face huggers really brings it home sorry go ahead i was just complimenting myself
baseball's my my true passion is as paul's um but i but i let it spill over into football as well
and i regretfully uh got my kids involved.
So you asked for an example.
One of them, and I don't know
if I can bring
evidence.
No, I'm happy to handle anything that you hand me.
Let me take a look.
Okay.
I'll touch these gloves that you brought
and I touch them to my face.
Give them a smell.
I have no fear.
Careful.
I have no fear from you, unless this has all been set up by Paul.
My Moriarty.
I know that he's going to confiscate my two garbage hats.
I know that he's going to confiscate my two garbage hats.
I'll plant two poison gloves in the pocket of my henchman Chris.
Hodgman will surely breathe deep.
What's the meaning of these gloves?
So these are Seattle Seahawk gloves back when Russell Wilson played for us.
Wow.
I went there.
I went there.
So are the Seahawks rivals with the Denver football team, the Broncos?
Wow.
I did my research.
I think they used to be.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, they used to be. So you Okay. Yeah, they used to be.
So you would bring your children to the game, and you had these gloves.
Well, so this is even deeper than that. My son and I, my two boys, Ryan and Jack, are watching the Seahawks play the Minnesota Vikings.
This is a playoff game about six, seven years ago.
The Vikings are about to win with a 25-foot chip shot to beat us in the wildcard game.
It's a sports metaphor about sports.
Please continue.
Super easy. I'm sure people here remember this game. It's a given that the Vikings are going
to beat the Hawks. And right before the shot, I throw these gloves to my son, Ryan,
put these on, good luck gloves.
The kid misses the chip shot for the Vikings.
Wait, your son missed the shot?
No, no, no, no.
If I believed in jinxes, yes, my son made the shot miss.
Right.
That's why you have the gloves but no son anymore.
So the Seahawks win the game because I threw my son these gloves.
Oh, no, that was a good thing.
Right.
Now I remember.
My poor son thinks that jinxes are a real deal because of me,
and I think that's completely irresponsible of me.
I think it's crazy to think that we have power
over what happens on the field.
And that was my point with jinxes.
I don't believe in them.
I don't believe in them.
May I, just for the listeners at home,
there was a very intense look shared between Paul and Chris.
Between the first and second, I don't believe in them.
The real reason though, Your Honor, I don't believe in them is because if they were true,
that the Mariners would have won five World Series in the last couple,
like last 10 years, let's say. Okay.
So you would only be using the gloves every other year for the Mariners?
using the gloves every other year for the Mariners.
So does your son still believe in jinx, in sports jinxing?
He does, and that's a failing as me of a parent
to pass this on, that you need to spend
your time worrying and think you're responsible
as if you're paying this premium to get
wins later on in life. It doesn't exist.
Chris, this is ridiculous.
Everyone knows that our jinxes fight with everyone else's jinxes.
So we have to do as many reverse jinxes as we can
so we've done more reverse jinxes than the other people have.
Right.
The Giants have won three World Series in the last 15
years. I think I know what I'm talking about.
That's a good point, Chris. Who's to say
that
the record show that Jesse has put his hat on
upside down and is
making the sign of the double face hugger.
What would be an example of a reverse jinx?
Anyone on stage who knows about sports?
Well, anything could be lucky.
Not changing her underpants, for example.
I mean, that's one of the luckiest things there is.
Well, being on tour has brought me a lot of luck then.
Chris, what would be a...
Hang on, Paul.
Chris, what would be a reverse jinx?
Your Honor, thank you for asking.
Betting on your team,
which is something I didn't do for 15 years
before I finally said,
to hell with this, I'm going to bet on the Mariners,
I'm going to do a reverse jinx, to your point,
sir with the awesome mustache,
that it doesn't matter what I do.
You know what?
I'll take 10 of whatever it is that you're selling.
That's right.
That was an incredible maneuver.
Judge Hodgman.
All of a sudden, I'm over here going, what the heck?
I want to buy whatever you're selling, too.
Why is he in love with my bailiff?
I also have a mustache.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to
you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org
slash join, and you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel.
Did you know that learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen?
Let's hear the sound.
Yep, that's the sound of you speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching.
So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound.
It's not just like a game that pretends to teach you a language.
It's also not a rigid, weird, hyper-academic chore.
It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you
while you are actually having a nice time.
And you get to hear this sound.
Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners.
Right now, get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, And you get to hear this sound. Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now.
Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners at babbel.com slash Hodgman.
Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman.
Rules and restrictions apply.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week
by our pals over at Made In.
Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio,
the famous chef, right?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
And did you know that most of the dishes
at that very same restaurant
are made with Made In pots and pans?
Really?
What's an example?
The braised short ribs.
They're made-in, made-in.
The Rohan duck.
Made-in, made-in.
Riders of Rohan, duck.
What about the Heritage Pork Shop?
You got it.
Made-in, made-in.
Made-in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants
with high-end cookware for years.
They make the stuff that chefs need.
Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron,
the best of stainless clad. It gets super hot. It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans you can own. And like we said, good enough for real professional chefs,
the best professional chefs. Oh, so I have to go all the way down to the restaurant district in restaurant town?
Just buy it online.
This is professional-grade cookware that is available online directly to you, the consumer,
at a very reasonable price.
Yeah.
If you want to take your cooking to the next level, remember what so many great dishes
on menus all around the world have in common.
They're made in, made in.
Save up to 25% this Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th.
Visit madeincookware.com.
That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com.
Paul, when Chris said that thing that cost the Phillies the World Series,
was there anything you could do, any kind of special dance or laundering habit
or toothpicking or anything that you could do to undo the damage that Chris did?
Well, you have to act swiftly in this instance,
and the reverse jinx is really important.
And so I said, hey, Jordan Alvarez, he's amazing.
He's an unrivaled talent on the Houston Astros.
They're the better team.
They're definitely going to win.
You saw what Jordan Alvarez can do yourself.
Clearly, he's going to break through at some point.
And the power of my reverse jinx was no match for his, you know, careless.
So the reverse jinx is saying your team sucks and they're going to lose.
Yes, that. Right. And the jinx was him saying your team is pretty good and they're going to lose. Yes, that.
Right.
And the jinx was him saying your team is pretty good and they're going to win.
Yeah, exactly.
Ah, I see.
Yeah.
And by saying those two sentences, what have I wrought in this universe?
I feel like I'm just a butterfly who just flapped its wings in Indonesia.
This is really important because at the time of this recording, we are 10 days away from the Super Bowl.
Okay. In which my Philadelphia Eagles...
That's a famous football fight.
...are about to play.
I've been doing my best to keep my distance from Chris.
He is invited to the Super Bowl party,
but I'm worried
about whatever he's going to say that's going to
ruin the Eagles' chances in the Super Bowl.
And what it would be would be anything positive
about the Eagles whatsoever. in the Super Bowl. And what it would be would be anything positive about the Eagles whatsoever.
Any assured statement?
Any assurance
that of course they're going to do...
I'm not saying anything. I'm even nervous with you
saying it right now. No, no, no, no, no. I'm not saying anything.
I'm not saying anything.
But yes, that. That's the sort of thing
and it would make you very upset.
It would. Well, it would ruin the Eagles' chances.
I'm trying to do everything I can
to win the Eagles a Super Bowl here.
I have to...
And I'm sure all of Philadelphia thanks you.
They're doing what they can, too.
There are batteries with your name on them in Philadelphia.
Go, Birds.
You know, I'm going to give you a shot here, Paul, to
finally say something.
You know, Chris makes the
point that
he had this awakening
that
when his son
started believing in
jinxes, he felt as
a father that was an irresponsible thing to do
because it is a kind of magical thinking
that you are going to be able to affect
or that, not even affect,
but that outcomes that you have no influence over
will be affected by the way you think, act, or feel,
which can cause a lot of anxiety.
It makes me nervous.
What are some of the fun upsides
of feeling terrified all the time that your friend Chris is going to say the wrong thing?
First of all, I'm speaking as a person who has driven both of my children away from team sports.
Neither one of them could care less about team sports at this point.
But my response to that is, what's wrong with magical thinking?
Magical thinking is a great thing.
We're all team sports, watching team sports.
You're watching grown men in pajamas throw a ball around, right?
I get that.
I understand it.
But what, you know, to me, it feels like you're part of something bigger than yourself.
If you feel like you are, like you have some sort of effect.
And so to me, sports superstitions, I'm not a religious person.
They turn you into a living God.
They turn you into a living God
based entirely on which sofa cushion you're sitting on.
Plenty of world religions are based on less.
That's what I'm saying.
To me, there's a beauty in this,
what you describe as magical thinking.
I think that that's a beautiful thing,
and I like being a part of it.
Judge Hodgman, if I could explain to you in literary terms.
Thank you.
You've probably read Joan Didion's book,
My Year of Magical Thinking.
Oh, yes.
About the 1987 Philadelphia Phillies.
LAUGHTER about the 1987 Philadelphia Phillies.
It was a real page-turner. Yeah.
So, we're coming up on the Super Bowl.
Your beloved Philadelphia Eagles.
Eagles.
How dare you?
Your beloved bird team
will either do well or poorly.
See how I threaded that needle?
Everything's still up in the air.
You're asking me to forbid your friend Chris
from saying anything that could possibly jinx them.
Yes.
Chris, how do you feel about that?
It's just tricky, right?
Like, where do I start and stop with that?
Well, you could possibly talk about something other than sports.
Tricky. that well you could possibly talk about something other than sports tricky yeah that's it it's a tough one tough one judge let the record show that chris is also chewing some gum in a charismatic way and looks like a
extremely handsome retired baseball player.
Wow.
Yeah, Chris definitely plays the game
the right way.
Do you think it would be an imposition
to you
to not be able to speak
to your friend until the Super Bowl
is over?
He did invite me to his house for the party.
Oh.
Doesn't it give you some pleasure
to know how much power you will wield at that party?
There's so much that you could get Paul to do.
I hadn't thought of that.
I don't mean it.
I wouldn't want to do that to him.
I wouldn't.
Because I agree.
I love sports for the way it brings everyone together.
Right?
There's probably Mariner fans in here right now.
There's all kinds of us.
And we just...
Yeah, I don't...
Do you remember...
Do you remember when the
audience booed you for mentioning a different team also remember exactly a kumbaya moment
also remember when you said you love the way sports brings people together
next to a philly sports guy.
So if I were to rule in your favor,
how would you have me rule?
Can you say that there's no such thing as sports jinxes?
I can say it.
Is this a technique you learned at a seminar?
Did you get the Judge John Hodgman lead?
That would be my request.
Where do I make my investment?
I feel very empowered now.
Do you have an online course?
How would you feel, how would it make you feel in both your rational and your emotional mind, Paul,
if I were to say,
with all of the godlike power that I've given myself as a fake internet
judge, there are no such things as jinxes. This is hypothetical. I'm not saying it, but
perhaps that's a jinx itself. You don't even know. Your brain's twisting and doing cartwheels
right now, trying to figure out, is this a jinx?
No, that's not a jinx.
I'd be sad.
Incorrect, sir.
You just don't know what I jinxed.
Let the record show that I waved my hand and went,
how does it make you feel?
I would be sad, right?
I think it would be sad to not believe
that we're all part of something bigger
that we can influence and be a part of.
Stop talking.
Okay.
This is the question I'm asking you.
Okay.
Based on my dialectical behavioral therapy
that I've been going through,
and it's been amazing.
When I say there's no such thing as jinxes
Describe what your body is doing and how you are feeling all right well based on my own
I can tell you that the chest is tightening. There's a pit in the stomach right the lizard brain the amygdala
It's all kicking in it's saying no no no this is wrong. What style of therapy are you doing?
Counseling. I don't know. Is it talking to a counselor?
Like cognitive behavioral therapy?
Yeah, that one. Boo!
Boo!
Boo!
The correct answer was high school vocational.
I can tell that it makes you
feel nervous. It makes you feel uncomfortable. And I don't want that makes you feel nervous.
It makes you feel uncomfortable.
Yeah.
And I don't want that for you, Paul.
Thank you.
Do you think that you've ever positively influenced your team, Paul?
I do, yes.
I traded away a bad luck hat to my brother for his good luck hat.
And it's been working ever since.
So can I ask you how...
My brother's okay.
How'd you sell him on that one?
Was it just a pure act of generosity on his part?
No, it was an objectively better hat that I gave him.
But I needed it out of my life because when I wore it, the Eagles were losing.
When he wears it, they win.
He's worn it two of the Eagles playoff games.
What kind of hat did you get back?
It's an Eagles championship hat from 2018.
Seems like kind of a jinx.
Not yet.
Okay.
I'm thoroughly confused.
And therefore, I think I know everything.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order
to make my decision. I'll be back in a moment with my verdict. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom. Chris, how are you feeling about your chances here tonight?
Did you close?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't think so.
I think Paul's got a pretty strong case against me.
Paul, how are you feeling?
You know, you asked me that question 10 years ago on the podcast,
and I said, as a Philadelphia sports fan,
I live in a constant state of pessimism.
I assume I'm going to lose.
I'm still there now.
Is pessimism a Philadelphia word for rage?
It's just a constant
state of affairs for us.
Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to
say about all this. Please rise as Judge
John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom
and delivers his verdict.
You may be seated.
Some time ago, I went to a sports contest,
a professional sports contest, in the sport of ice hockey.
Now, you know, sure, the minorist of the major leagues.
You probably know that I am a fan of only one sport,
which is the sport of extinct hockey. Hockey teams that don't exist anymore. The Hartford Whalers, the Quebec Nordiques, etc. I love them because the outcome is known and it reduces my
anxiety. All extinct hockey teams are losers,
and I can sympathize with them.
But as part of a research project,
I went to an actual live non-extinct hockey game
being played between the Pittsburgh Penguins
and another team that I don't remember.
And in advance of this, I was talking to the noted
public radio hockey correspondent,
Greg Wyshynski.
And Greg told me that he had a ritual.
He had to have pink lemonade
when he went to the hockey game
or else his team would lose.
And I said,
that is goddamn offensive. That is an insult. Because I
am not an athlete, nor do I follow sports. But I know that these athletes work very hard. They
push themselves and train themselves and study their work day in and day out. And to suggest that somehow your wishing is going to affect their
performance is an insult to those professional athletes, in my opinion. I went to the game,
but I did ask him, should I bring my Hartford Whalers hat to the game? Because will that jinx
it? And he said, no, I think it'll be fine. I I went to the game and I just felt funny about wearing my Hartford Braille's hat
in that ice arena
and it came to
what do you call it
sudden death at the end of hockey
oh yeah overtime
sudden death
someone was going to die
sudden death was at the
that was at the end of
Joan Didion's My Year of Magic.
That's right. Final chapter. And the other team had one chance to get a goal against the
Pittsburgh Penguins. And then the other team was going to win. But if the Pittsburgh Penguins
blocked the goal, game over, Pittsburgh Penguins won. And I was rooting for the Pittsburgh Penguins because I knew the name
of the team. So
I couldn't help myself.
The last second
I put on that Hartford
Whalers hat and
the Penguins lost
because of what I did.
It's a powerful, powerful feeling
that you have ruined a hockey game
and disappointed fans,
and you're in Pittsburgh.
Who knows what they'll do to you if they ever found out
that you and your hat lost the game for their team.
It is part of my therapy to hold opposite ideas in the same moment.
On the one hand, there is the idea.
We are pattern-recognizing animals.
We build narratives around us, and we are massive
egotists. We want to be part of those narratives, even when, in fact, what is also true is that the
universe doesn't care about us. We are an accident of evolution, and we won't last forever, and
nothing we do is going to affect anything. We can hold both...
That's the spirit. That's... that's what I expect from a city with legalized
marijuana. In my therapy they just taught me Yankees suck.
These seem like two opposite ideas to hold at the same time.
But let me ask you, Paul, have you ever watched, do you have Disney Plus?
Yes.
Have you watched the Star Wars show called Andor?
I have.
Yeah.
Have I told you what my proposed motto for that show Andor is?
No.
Andor, why not both?
Unfortunately. Why not both?
Unfortunately, this is not a new bit.
I think John's about ready to get a tattoo of this bit.
So pumped about it.
Doesn't even make any sense.
There's and in there.
It is both.
But I'm just trying to get thematically to the idea of why not both.
Why not accept that the universe has no story to it and that we only suffer through it?
And the egotistical idea that we can affect what people who are much
more physically talented than we are do on the field. Why not both? The problem is that if you
accept your point of view, Paul, you are going to suffer. Whereas if, Chris, we follow your point
of view, and your son does as well, and recognize that we are meaningless in this universe,
until we buy what you're selling.
It's profoundly humbling and even sad,
almost as sad as the way you talk.
But it is also liberating.
It felt better to me when I realized
that the news made me upset
and didn't change because I read it.
It's important to be informed, but the compulsive reading of the news
or, say, watching election results or whatever
is just making me feel really, really, really bad.
Thank me, I'm sure.
What changes things in the world is activism and direct action,
not watching and talking and tweeting and thinking.
So what I'm saying to you, Paul, is if things aren't going as well on the field as you would like,
just get out there, buddy.
You've already proven you can insinuate yourself
into my life
talk yourself onto the field
say I got a couple of toy
helmets or whatever
here's what I'm going to say
Chris
in my opinion has a
healthier world view than you
but if it gives you happiness and not pain in my opinion, has a healthier worldview than you.
But if it gives you happiness and not pain, well, okay. I mean, I guess part of the pleasure of following sports is the pain that it causes you. It's called the Hellraiser principle.
These jinxes are kind of like your Cenobites
coming to rip your skin off and make you feel terrible.
Look at Chris for a sad man.
Look how happy he is.
Now that he admits that he's about a speck of meaningless dust
in an uncountable time in this universe
that has no meaningful story
or purpose.
But, okay,
if you want to feel this way,
that's fine.
Chris, I am going
against my better judgment
to find in Paul's favor.
Wow.
I'm going to find in Paul's favor only because as his friend, you know some of the things that will trigger this anxiety. And you should probably avoid doing that if you know that
saying the wrong thing, you know the kinds of things that you could say. You're correct
and happier. Do you have children? Yes could say. You're correct and happier.
Do you have children?
Yes.
Okay, you're a better father also.
That's not true.
That's not true.
That's not true.
But I can't take the joy of Paul's pain away from him.
Paul, I'm going to rule in your favor,
and I'm going to say that I have absolute confidence that the Philadelphia Eagles are going to win this.
No, they're not.
This is the sound of the gavel.
I hope you have fun. That is all.
Paul and Chris, thank you for joining us
on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman,
and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace
because, yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on
Maximum Fun or wherever you get your
podcasts. Thank you.
And remember, no running
in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're
on the go, try S-T-O-P
P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-H
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I
It'll never fit.
No, it will. Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O
We are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
We're taking a break from our show at the Gothic Theater.
You have a live show coming up for our New York-based friends.
I know.
You know, apart from our
tour, I don't do as many live shows as I used to, but I have a rare live event coming up here in my
hometown of New York City. Selected Shorts, very famous radio program about short stories,
asked me to host the McSweeney's 25th anniversary extravaganza on May 10th at Symphony Space. And how could I say
no? I didn't. I said, yes, I will host it. It's going to be a great night with full of friends
and family of McSweeney's reading stories and sharing memories. I'm hosting it with musical
guest Stephen Merritt of the Magnetic Fields. I think it's going to be a really special night
and I hope you can come. And I'll tell you what, uh, symphony space selected shorts. They got special tickets. If
you're under 30 years old, 17 bucks, just in for 17 bucks. Fantastic deal. So, uh, check it out.
Just Google selected shorts, John Hodgman. You'll find it. Jesse, what do you have going on?
I have some cool stuff, uh, on bullseye and Jordan Jesse Go, my other shows.
We had a couple of really cool Bullseye interviews recently.
One was with my friend Mark Maron, who folks might know as a comic and actor and podcaster.
A really fun and deep conversation about what's been going on in his life, among other things,
a really brilliant standup special and his partner who passed away. Hmm. Mark Summers from Double Dare telling the story of the time Burt Reynolds pied him on The
Tonight Show. Okay. In an angry way.
And one of the greatest artists of the American theater,
as far as I'm concerned, Anna Deavere Smith,
who folks might know from her journalistic solo shows,
like Twilight Los Angeles 1992,
which is in revival here in LA.
And Anna Deavere Smith, like possibly the smartest and
most insightful person who's ever been on Bullseye. Just a level of incandescent brightness
that you cannot believe is real. And if you want to learn something about theater and how it works
and how to make it, you could hardly do better than that conversation with Anna Deavere Smith. I really can't say enough about her, her work, all that kind of stuff.
And then, you know, over on Jordan, Jesse Go, it's a bunch of me and Jordan swearing and
saying gross stuff. So go listen to that if that's what you're into.
You might say that it is two of the funniest people and oldest friends being as funny as funny people can be, honestly, is what it is.
So go listen to those shows.
Let's get back to the stage of the Gothic Theater in Denver and swift justice with our pal, the hilarious David Borey.
Please welcome to the stage, Christy and Andrew.
Christy.
Christy brings the case against her boyfriend Andrew. Andrew likes to play
video games featuring Nintendo's
famous hero plumber.
Christy
says he
pronounces that character's name
incorrectly.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Hello, Christy and Andrew.
Andrew, you like to play video games
featuring Nintendo's famous
hero plumber?
Nintendo's famous hero plumber.
It says here on the paper.
It's like a modern day warrior poet.
Yeah.
I thought Jesse had been replaced by
a chat bot. Okay.
I thought Jesse had been replaced by a chat bot.
Okay.
David Borey, I think you would make a good king of the cowboy poets.
Man, your lips to God's ears.
Okay.
But Christy says that you say the name of this hero adventure plumber.
What was it?
That's Nintendo's Famous Hero Plumber.
Christy says that you say the name of this,
of Nintendo's Famous Hero Plumber incorrectly.
How would you say it?
Let's say, for example, that you were this person,
and you were saying, it's me.
This person.
I'm going to start with this is a gotcha,
but I would say it's a me, Mario.
Wow.
Yeah, I expected that.
How would you park the car at Harvard Yard?
I don't know, on the green?
Very reasonable.
I'd do spot hero and probably try to get a spot in the Charles Hotel garage.
Yeah.
Because I'm a bougie asshole.
That's a gotcha.
You're not wrong.
You're not wrong, Andrew.
That was a gotcha.
I gotcha.
I got you. That's gotcha is me mispronouncing I gotcha. You're not wrong. You're not wrong, Andrew. That was a gotcha. I gotcha. I got you.
That's gotcha is me mispronouncing I got you.
But it had to happen.
Christy, how do you, let's say you were a famous hero plumber
and you were going to identify yourself.
Wait a minute.
Are you Christy or who are you?
No, it's a me.
Mario.
Okay.
I mean... This is why the fans were so upset
that Christy didn't play Mario in the movie.
That's right.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah, please.
What about his evil twin?
How do you pronounce that name?
Wario.
Whoa.
Wario.
Wait a second!
I call shenanigans on this guy.
Andrew, do you come from a place
where this is how Mario is pronounced typically?
Yes, actually I do.
Where do you come from?
So I grew up here, but I lived in New York until I was nine.
Okay.
Hudson River Valley, just north of the city.
Sure.
And that is how people say.
Putnam County?
Westchester County?
Westchester, near Cherrytown.
White Plains?
Sleepy Hollow.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Of course.
Right.
Metro North represent.
That is what Sleepy Hollow is best known for
Oh yeah
Yeah it's Metro North Station
For sure
Yeah yeah
Hey guys
The terrifying story
Of the commuter train
Without a conductor
Guys we got five minutes a case
So if we spend three minutes
Making local references
To a place where we are not
Look I've been on the road for a week Wearing the same underwear Good luck but I'm homesick Spend three minutes making local references to a place where we are not.
Look, I've been on the road for a week wearing the same underwear.
Good luck, but I'm homesick.
Would you say that there in Sleepy Hollow,
on a dark Halloween,
everyone would be saying Mario instead of Mario?
Is that how it's said there, sir?
It is absolutely how it is said there.
I feel like...
Hold!
Hold.
All right, I will ask the audience in a moment, please.
Please finish your sentence.
I want to point out there was a yes in there.
That's fine.
They're also part of the audience.
Great.
Yes.
I'm feeling kind of...
Try to hold both ideas at the same time.
Okay, okay.
See what I mean?
But yeah, that is how I would say it there when i'm talking about the game it is super mario world or something to
that effect i think if yeah that's that's that's it that's when you just said it like that so
casually yes it's like i hardly even noticed it was weird it seems okay if that's how you grew up
christy why is this bad because it's a person's name.
So like different words can have regional pronunciations.
But Mario, as you so started, he says his own name.
Hell yeah.
And we need to respect how people pronounce their own names.
Oh.
And one might argue that that extends even now to virtual people,
like video game characters and other AIs, right, chatbot?
What do you think about this, David Borey?
I'm with you.
As someone who has a name that's often mispronounced,
I think it doesn't matter regionally.
He yells it all the time. He's like, Mario, Mario,
Mario.
You're not new to this. You know what it is.
You're like, hey, Mario. That's not...
That's not fair to anybody.
It would be fair.
To be fair, it would be fair
to say Mario if it were
a Nintendo platformer
about former New York governor
and several-time presidential candidate
Mario Cuomo.
That's true.
That's true.
A video game that is begging to be made.
Oh, I wish there was a game about eloquence.
But on the other hand,
I think, David Bore,
you make a point
just by saying,
how did you say it?
It's a me?
It's a me, Mario.
That's not what you're saying, Christy.
You're over here saying, it's a me, Mario.
Do it his way.
It's a me, Mario!
Yeah, that's how you say it.
This feels like we're getting into weird territory.
I don't know. I think it's kind of hot.
That's what I meant.
Weird territory.
That's right.
Andrew, does Christy say anything
quote-un unquote wrong?
Yeah, they're from Wisconsin.
So you can ask them to say a word like bag.
Like bag.
Yeah, like a thing you put things in.
Right.
How would you say that word?
That would be bag.
Bag.
It sounds like you're made to say Mario.
That would be a bag?
Yeah.
Oh, I see.
Correct.
Any other Wisconsin things you want to bring up to humiliate your partner?
Any proper noun.
Because she's saying words, right?
It's still names.
Any names she says wrong.
I'm not trying to shame.
How do you say the name of the actor Ed Begley Jr.?
Beg, right? Ed Begley Jr.? Beg, right?
Ed Begley Jr., right?
Sure.
Ed Begley Jr., who I totally know who that is.
Wow.
Oh, no.
Oh, I lost the crowd favor so quickly.
Wowee.
Someone's not doing enough about the climate crisis.
That's right.
Somewhere in the world, Christopher Guest is showing emotion for once.
Just kidding, Christopher Guest.
I love you if you hear this part.
I can't think of a person.
Let's go.
So there was one person yelling in the crowd that in Sleepy Hollow, you do say Mario who is the one who said who takes that position
but they're not speaking up anymore what what what what what no I know someone yelled no I'm
getting to you person someone did yell yes you heard it right heard it who was the one who
yelled yes they've left in shame.
Now, vocal person halfway down in the back in the darkness who yelled no.
Are you from Westchester
County? Are you from Sleepy Hollow?
Right, okay.
Tell you what, we'll go to the audience
when it's time.
What would you
have me rule if I were to rule in your favor, Christy?
I would like you to rule that he should stop saying this name incorrectly,
and also just to admit that he's wrong.
Why would you resist that judgment?
So my only thing is, I actually do pronounce,
when I think about the actor Mario Lopez.
Sure.
And I'm sure you think about him a lot.
Sure, yeah.
Oddly, especially recently.
But I have to actually think about that
and make myself make that change in pronunciation,
which is like fine.
I'm super okay with doing that for a real person.
I just don't think that the distinction
between fictional character and real human
is one where I need to, like,
worry about it. But why do you say Wario?
Oh, that's lazy, pal.
Sorry.
That's lazy.
You don't want to start muddling that up.
You know what I mean?
Who have you spent more time with,
Slater or Mario?
Yeah, good point.
What would you have me rule if I were to rule in your favor, Andrew?
I mean, the general ruling would be just stop rolling your eyes when I do it.
And just, like, don't worry about it.
How often is this even happening?
Surprisingly often.
Why are you always going around the apartment going, it's me, Mario.
Sometimes I'm like, do you want to play some Mario Kart?
Oh.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't like go around like using this.
Why is Mario Kart so much worse than Super Mario World?
It was a bummer, I don't know why.
So, but the meme ruling would be,
they have to say
bag
every time they say the word bag
they have to pronounce it that way
so you get Mario
you get to say Mar- wait
not like forever but like
I don't know the next two weeks
when they say the word
two weeks of bag
to understand how it actually takes effort you're gonna get two weeks of bag I Yes. To understand how it actually takes effort.
You're going to get two weeks of bag.
I don't even know what that means.
I don't either, but I'm scared.
Doesn't sound good.
Sounds better than two weeks of bag, though.
No offense. I love
Wisconsin accent.
Here's what I think.
I'm loathe to
try to stamp out regionalism in how people speak.
The way that people grow up speaking in different accents is a fascinating reminder that we're a big country with a lot of different experiences.
And also trying to wipe out regionalisms in speech often is pretty discriminatory
and it's saying that people are stupid
because they don't talk the way I talk.
But Christie makes a good point.
If Mario were here,
and it's pretty clearly pronounced Mario,
I don't, that's, yes,
it's also important to respect how humans wish to be,
you know, how their names are pronounced and how they
wish to be spoken of in the world and referred to in the world.
Sadly, little Mario isn't here to defend himself.
I am going to, it's not like me to split the baby, but I'm in a different mindset these
days normally.
Do you have Disney Plus?
You know I do.
I do.
Did you ever see the Star Wars show Andor?
Did you ever see the Star Wars show Andor?
I did.
Yeah.
My feeling is
Andor, why not both?
When referring to the soon to be...
When referring to the soon to be sentient being known as Mario,
you must say Mario, as in, it's a me, Mario, or look at Mario
driving so swiftly in his Mario cart. When referring to his cart, you may say Mario.
But if only out of consistency, the hobgoblin of minds I like. Since you say Wario, say it's a me, Mario.
Mario Kart is acceptable, and you can say bag, beg,
but do get to know the work of Ed Begley Jr.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Christy and Andrew, welcome Adrienne and Claire.
Adrienne brings the case against her girlfriend, Claire.
Adrienne says her dog, Rosie, has hands.
Claire says dogs only have feet.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
We have not met before, so I'm going to...
Adrienne, are you on my left?
Raise your hand if your name is Adrienne.
Adrienne. Am I pronouncing that correctly?
Yes.
Adrienne, you claim that dogs have hands.
Is that correct?
I believe that my dog has cute hands.
Okay.
So noted.
Clarification noted.
What do other dogs have?
Dirty stumps?
You know, I think I'm only
concerned with my dog
and her cute hands.
Alright.
Not my dog's nasty flappers.
What is the name of your dog?
Rosie.
Rosie, okay.
What makes you feel that Rosie has hands
where others, including the person you share your life with,
would say otherwise?
So it's about how she presents them to the world,
which is usually in this type of configuration.
So for the listeners at home, it's a proffered cross-paw configuration, which is very adorable
to see.
And also how she uses them.
Which is, I'm sure, to sketch drawings, do jigsaw puzzles.
Smoke cigs.
So she can shake with her right and her left hands.
She's ambidextrous.
Yes.
All right.
She uses her hands like this when she tries to, you know, eat a toy, use a bone, eat a carrot.
For the listener at home, Adrienne is making the shape of the double face hugger.
making the shape of the double face hugger to indicate how Rosie uses her quote-unquote hands
to lift what food to her mouth or hold balls or something?
Toys, carrots, but using them to put food in her face.
I couldn't believe that you had said carrots.
Carrots.
She eats a lot of carrots per day.
It's very obvious from the gesture you were making
that your dog is eating hoagies.
How sure are we it's a dog?
Not to be that guy.
Good question, David Borey.
Claire, how sure are we it's a dog?
90%.
90%?
Yeah.
I notice that Adrienne refers to Rosie as her dog.
Is it a shared dog or is it?
No, it's very firmly her dog.
Right.
And why does Rosie have not hands but feet, which is also debatable?
She spends a lot of time walking on them.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
So that's a lot of it.
I mean, I would think that opposable thumbs are pretty much de rigueur.
Yeah, I think it's important to recognize...
When we talk about typical hands.
Certainly, lots of people have hands and don't have thumbs, of course.
But I'm saying that's kind of how we basically baseline define hands.
Right, Claire?
Yeah, I think it's really important to recognize that raccoons have very cute hands.
And that's a distinction.
But raccoons' hands are also nasty flappers.
That's true.
Big, nasty flappers.
Oh, hold on.
Yeah, I just got some news.
We actually had a completely different set of people send in this exact same dispute.
It's a big Colorado
problem.
Please welcome Rachel to the stage.
Welcome Rachel to the stage.
Rachel,
you sent in the same dispute?
Yes, I did. But about
a different dog? Yes.
What is the name of the dog you sent in
your dispute about? My husband's and
my dog's name is Angus. Angus. Okay, I heard something different now. Angus. Got it. Okay,
Angus. Do you know Claire and Adrienne? No. What is happening? And where is your husband?
He's working tonight, unfortunately. And where is your dog?
With my parents.
Does your dog have hands?
I like to think that hands can be a conditional state
depending on what my dog is doing.
This is going crazy.
I think this is part of the airport horse's plan.
What are the conditions under which your dog's paws magically transform into hands in a kind of like Catholic miracle way?
Angus also likes to hold bones while he's chewing them.
Hold bones.
How often does he hold carrots? Angus also likes to hold bones while he's chewing them. Hold bones?
How often does he hold carrots?
He doesn't like vegetables very much.
I see.
And your husband disagrees with you?
Yes. He would refer to those front appendages as?
Feet.
Feet.
Since he's not here to make his case, Claire,
it falls to you to make the case for the world.
Why is it important to establish that these dogs,
Angus and Rosie and perhaps other dogs in Colorado,
do not have hands.
I think it's really important for creatures that have hands to have that distinction.
So humans and, I don't know, raccoons as well.
You've been sent by the raccoons.
That's exactly correct, yes.
Bought and paid for by the raccoon lobby.
I wouldn't put it past them.
You found me out. Do you know we have an apartment in Brooklyn, New York, a metropolitan, large metropolitan area, David Borey.
I've heard.
And our apartment is on the ground floor.
And we have a little sliding door that leads out to a little bit of green space.
Okay, like a backyard?
Like not a backyard, but like a postage stamp of green.
Okay, like your bins out there and stuff?
Say it again?
You have your bins out there?
Your bins.
My bins.
You recycle your trash bin?
No, no, no, no.
We don't keep trash out there.
Oh, it's just like...
This is New York.
They keep trash in big piles on the sidewalk for some reason.
Yeah.
They've figured out everything else about being awesome except for that.
They keep it next to the peak.
I only make the distinction because this is, you know, for the reason in the story, you'll
understand, this is not a place where we store trash.
This is just a little tiny little miniature garden.
And of a summer evening, my wife was a whole human being in her own right,
and I were playing the game Scrabble.
And we had the sliding door open,
but the screen door shut,
you don't have to let in the air.
And we heard,
and we looked over,
and this little,
furry,
monstrous hand
had slid the screen door open
and a raccoon
walked halfway into our apartment
in New York City
looked around
and then backed out
and as it was backing out
it said, I hope you can know I can kill you at any time
I mean you're lucky it backed out
because I know traditional raccoon law
and that would have been his apartment
that's true exactly
adverse raccoon possession
yeah that's
an old case
you don't want your dogs to have hands
hands are the tools of monsters look at the
world we live in all the worst guys i know have hands i don't want any creeps i don't want any
creeps taking advantage of this information but david borey i'll tell you in confidence right now
thank you jesse and i are staying at a hotel in den Denver that used to be a vocational school
and is now a boutique hotel
this country's doing great
we're going to be just fine because they're fixing up the schools
I'm sleeping in a classroom
where people used to learn
how to design bridges and roads.
They could get a middle class life building infrastructure in this country.
And now all I'm doing is watching Don't Worry Darling at 2 a.m. eating a bunch of Pringles to do a podcast.
The country's doing great.
You know why?
Hands.
I'm being sarcastic.
Hands.
You don't want hands. You don't want hands. Dogs
don't want hands. That's why they
have paws. This is the sound of a cat.
Thank you,
Adrienne, Claire, and Rachel.
Welcome Caroline and
Aaron. Caroline brings the
case against her girlfriend, Aaron.
Aaron wants Caroline to accept
part ownership of her cat.
Caroline says that cat is Aaron's.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Who seeks justice in this court?
I do.
Caroline.
And you are Caroline.
Yes.
So what's happening here?
You have a cat?
Aaron has a cat.
Aaron's family adopted this cat in 2015.
Aaron and I met in the fall
of 2020. Aaron wants
me to accept this cat as mine
now that we have moved in together.
Well, congratulations on moving in together.
I hope you're having a great time.
Aaron, why do you want Caroline to adopt
your cat?
I think it's cruel not to.
Why? Well, my cat... The cat doesn't
care. The cat barely knows
you're alive.
That's not true. She's a very
affectionate cat. Cats can be very
affectionate. They know you're alive.
They're waiting for you to die, so they
can eat you. Get that sweet cheek
meat, you know?
Barbacoa.
So, our dear? Barbacoa. So,
our dear
cat Prudence, yes?
Dear Prudence. Dear Prudence, yes.
Not as in the column, but as in the cat.
Right. Our dear Prudence,
I... Is that the cat's
full name, our dear Prudence?
Just Prudence, but she is our
dear cat Prudence. Well, no,
she's your dear cat Prudence, but she is our dear cat, Prudence. Well, no, she's your dear cat, Prudence.
ODP?
Until I order joint custody.
Which I do hope you will.
So tell me about our dear cat, Prudence.
Our dear cat, Prudence.
So I, during quarantine, lived completely alone in an apartment.
I was supposed to have a roommate, didn't have a roommate, and I was very lonely.
And so my mom
offered to just send the cat
with me. Right. And so I took
the cat, and I decided that
I loved the cat so much, and having
her in my home so much, that she should just
be my cat. And my mom was like,
cool, she's your cat. She was allergic to
cats anyway.
It seems to me you're
answering a question I didn't ask. I didn't ask how is it that this
wonderful cat, your dear Prudence, come into your life, but why do you want Caroline to be a co-parent
to it, and how is it cruel that she isn't? Well, this is part of it. The time that I brought the
cat to my apartment and she officially became my cat was about a week before we met. Okay.
Right.
So she wasn't really my cat until about right around the time that we got to know each other.
And as Erin likes to tell people, I essentially moved in about a week after we met.
So you are identifying your relationship with the cat and with Caroline as happening all at once.
Essentially. It's the formation of a kind of throuple.
Yes, me and my dear girlfriend and our cat.
Yes.
It sounds extremely wholesome to me, honestly.
It's fantastic.
But you're saying the cat and Caroline came into your life around the same time,
so why shouldn't there be a bond?
and Caroline came into your life around the same time.
So why shouldn't there be a bond?
Yeah, so essentially, I mean,
the cat and Caroline came into my life at the same time.
And also, around the time that, you know,
Caroline came into my life and she decided to make me her partner long-term,
and now we live together,
she knew that the cat came with that.
She knew that the cat was part of the deal.
And so if she didn't want a cat,
I probably wasn't the right person to be dating.
Whoa.
This got heavy quick.
She's really good at that.
Sorry.
Essentially, you are making an ultimatum.
No.
You must count this cat as your own, or we're not meant to be, is what you're saying.
No, not necessarily.
Okay.
No, no.
But I'm just saying it probably wasn't, you know.
Not in so many words.
Yeah.
But in about the same number of words and meaning the same thing.
Well.
I can see.
That's a fairly emotionally manipulative thing to do, Erin, if I may say.
Caroline, why do you hate this cat?
So, I very much love Prudence.
It's just this was a cat that was part of Aaron's life for, you know, five years before we met.
And I feel like, if anything, I am a step parent to her.
And while I love her very much, I have no familial emotions.
Classic stepmom move.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like Cinderella. Emotional emotions. Classic stepmom move. Yeah. Yeah.
It's like Cinderella.
I mean, you have to enter into a blended family delicately.
You can't just be like, this is your new mommy.
Exactly.
Do you know what I mean?
Exactly. Have you thought about making the cat live in a tower until its hair grows long enough
for someone to climb up and marry it?
Or at least send it to boarding school.
Yeah.
So you guys can party.
Erin, normally we would be able to show photos of the pets that we discuss on this show.
Right now we don't have that capability,
so I need you to paint a word picture of Prudence.
Tell me what Prudence looks like
in a typical Prudence pose.
Yeah, so she's a domestic long-haired cat
with long, fluffy gray fur and some white spots.
And her favorite way to be is to lounge very elegantly,
to look like a queen wherever she goes,
and also to sometimes just roll over on her back
and just show off her belly to the entire world and
stay like that for two hours because belly up is very elegant yes whoa it is when she doesn't don't
judge you find this cat disgusting i was
i was just i was just caught up in this beautiful word painting of this wonderful cat.
But it seems as though you do not.
You're like, that's not ladylike, dear.
Listen to your new mommy.
Indeed.
We eat dinner at the table together.
Do you?
That would be cool.
Sometimes she likes to jump up there with us.
Yeah, of course. But how else?
Does she like to cuddle with Caroline?
Yes, yes she does indeed.
Caroline, is this true or false?
This is true. She's very affectionate, as Aaron said.
And when she gets up on your lap or whatever,
do you just put your arms
aside and stare into the middle distance?
Expressing no emotion
until...
As I said, I love her very much.
I will pet her.
I will caress her.
I am not the kind of person who will fawn over her and my heart melts, but I'll pet
the cat if she sits in my lap.
That all sounds pretty reasonable.
I mean, what more do you want from Caroline?
I want maybe a little bit more responsibility for the cat and her needs than what we're currently seeing.
I heard someone in the audience say with cynical finality, cat box.
Yes.
There was a point.
Is this a cat box cleaning dispute?
Do you want Caroline to clean the cat box?
I don't think it necessarily should be boiled down to that,
but there was a point where Caroline did say to me,
see, see, Aaron, I love the cat,
but if I claim her as my own,
that means I have to help clean the litter box.
That's true.
And that seems to be her only reasoning
for not wanting to partially adopt the cat.
And a damn good reason it is.
Hold on, hold on.
Now, I will mention we also have a dog.
And we live in an apartment, okay?
I see.
We take the dog out.
What is the name of this dog that you didn't even care to mention earlier?
Tuna.
Tuna.
Yes.
Our dear Tuna.
Whose dog is Tuna?
Ours.
Oh, no! Oh, no.
Wow.
Wow.
We adopted Tuna a year and a half.
Oh, no.
No, my math is wrong.
Seven months after we met.
Okay, but you adopted Tuna together.
Together.
Aaron is insistent that we didn't, but we did.
Can you paint, Caroline, can you paint a word picture of Tuna for me?
Yes. Tuna for me?
Yes.
Tuna is a scrap of a dog.
She is a 10-pound terrier mix, coarse gray, and she only has three legs.
We don't have pictures of this f***ing dog?
I sent this. Jesse, I don't want to upset you, but this sounds like a real scruffy dog.
Richard, when we said we didn't have enough money
to pay for the projector,
you didn't tell me there was a scruffy,
three-legged f***ing dog.
Jesus f***ing Christ.
No, I'm hurt too.
Because David, she said it's a terrier mix.
And I said, oh, is it going to be scruffy?
She said, yeah, it's really scruffy.
And then she said it has three f***ing legs.
It's a tripod f***ing dog and I can't see it.
No, all I want to do is see it.
Now, Caroline.
Yes.
Without referring to your notes or your phone, can you describe Prudence?
Yes. Prudence is a cat who is almost exactly the same size you love that dog and you're ambivalent about that cat i am not ambivalent about the cat
i just maybe i love the dog a little bit more fair well somebody think of the children. I appreciate your honesty.
Now, who walks the dog?
Both of us.
And I presume in Denver you pick up that poop.
We actually are about an hour outside of Denver, but yes, we do.
Right.
Okay, good.
And would you say that that is equally shared, those responsibilities, Erin?
Yes.
Yes.
So the only thing outstanding is that you have this elegant creature that poops
in a box in your bathroom. Yes. And that's the problem. You want Caroline to clean up the cat
box. I want her to claim the cat as her own with me. And part of that happens to be the litter box.
And if she does not claim the cat as her own and clean the litter box,
then it means she doesn't love you enough.
It means she doesn't love
Prudence enough.
And
maybe a little bit by extension.
David, Bori,
what do you think about this?
This is complicated.
As someone who has a stepdad
he's not a fan of,
I'm going to say you guys probably got to do it like we did in my house and you're gonna have to fist fight that cat.
We're cool now.
If there was no tuna,
if there was no shared dog,
then I would feel very comfortable saying,
sorry, Aaron, you and Prudence are
a bonded pair, and you can't force a cat upon someone else.
But since you have, and I hate to say this, a fur child together already, it is not fair.
It is the stuff
of the Am I the A**hole Reddit
for you to come out and say
this is our shared dog
and that is her cat.
Because the thing is
animals are not humans.
Fur babies are animal companions not babies that you have.
Sorry, I'm going to get jumped outside of the former vocational school.
Animals are not your children, but they are deeply, deeply sensitive creatures, obviously.
And I happen to know that if a cat senses unfairness in your house,
there shall be vengeance.
Probably in the form of toxoplasmosis.
Unless there is a medical reason for not cleaning the cat box,
I think
it would be nice for you to do it once
a year
otherwise
take good care of your
cat Caroline
she is part of your family just as Aaron
is and I hope that you all
have an enjoyable time together here and outside of Colorado where you still pick up the poop.
Aaron and Caroline.
That's it for this week's episode.
Thank you to everybody who joined us on stage at the Gothic Theater in Denver.
We are so grateful to all of
our litigants who come and perform as part of our live shows. And a very special thank you
to our friend, now Denver-based comedian, David Borey. David is not just a brilliant stand-up
comic and not just a voice you hear sometimes if you subscribe to Paramount+.
Oh, really? stand-up comic and not just a voice you hear sometimes if you subscribe to Paramount Plus.
Oh, really?
Yeah, he does. He voices things on Paramount Plus. I think he's the voice of Comedy Central now.
I think Kyle Kinane has ceded it to David Borey.
Yeah, there was a ceremony. Yeah, a brilliant stand-up comic. He's also a hilarious podcaster. If you've never heard the
podcast All Fantasy Everything with Borey and Ian Carmel and Sean Jordan, they are so funny. They do fantasy drafts of everything. And Bori now has his own podcast called My Mama Told Me with Langston Kerman.
It is an investigation into Black conspiracy theories, which I think is a fascinating subject.
Love it.
Love it.
Love it.
Langston, also crazy funny.
But yeah, Borey, one of the funniest dudes ever.
So go check out My Mama Told Me and All Fantasy Everything. My Mama Told Me and All Fantasy Everything.
Evidence and photos from our show posted on our Instagram account at instagram.com slash
Judge John Hodgman.
Follow us there.
Join the conversation about this week's episode on the Maximum Fund subreddit at MaximumFund.Reddit.com.
Thanks to Reddit user Scrotal Migraine for naming this episode's case.
Buy me subpoenas and Cracker Jack.
Can't deny that genius. Judge John Hodgman created by
Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman. This episode recorded by our friend Matthew Barnhart,
produced by Valerie Moffitt, Richard Roby and Jennifer Marmer. We'll talk to you next time
on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.